Meral Ekincioğlu

Dr. Ekincioglu obtained her Ph.D. degree from
Istanbul Technical University in 2011. Based on her dissertation research at Harvard University's Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture; and Columbia University's Graduate School of
Architecture, Planning and Preservation, she completed the first Ph.D. investigating the practice
history of Tekeli-Sisa Architectural Partnership, established in Istanbul in
1954, and still active at Istanbul Technical University.
Sociology, theory and the modern history of the architecture profession,
modernization of architectural design practice and its historical thresholds in
postwar Turkey are her major academic fields.

As a visiting scholar at MIT's History, Theory and Criticism of
Architecture Program since 2014, her academic research project focuses on the writing of feminist
history, the politics of gender and transnational practice in architecture, and
more specifically, the history of Turkish women architects’ educational and
professional careers in postwar America.

Since 2002 Meral
has taught advanced studio design and various courses related to the history,
theory and discourse of 20th century modern and contemporary
architecture and its practice in Istanbul. In 2001 she served on the
organizing committee of the first national symposium on Architecture and
Philosophy organized by Istanbul Technical University and Istanbul University, at which she presented her published paper.

She
is also the general publishing coordinator of Boyut Cagdas Turk ve Dunya
Mimarlari Dizisi (Boyut Contemporary Turkish and World Architects Series)
published in 2000-2001. From 1991-2001 she was an editor of the Turkish architecture journals Arredamento Mimarlik (Arredamento
Architecture), and from 2002-2005 she was a founding co-editor of the Turkish architecture and design journal “PORTOLYO.” Meral has several published articles and translations
on modern and contemporary design practitioners in architecture, and presented papers at two conferences
organized by MIT Comparative Media Studies in 2007 and in 2009.

Her
graduation project was nominated as the award candidate at the fifth National
Architecture Awards organized by the Chamber of Architects of Turkey in 1996,
and she has worked for various architectural offices and firms in Istanbul. Meral is the member of the Society of Architectural Historians,
the registered architect and member of the Chamber of Architects of Turkey,
which is also a member section of the International Union of Architects (UIA)
and the honorary member of the World Architecture Community.